35 private links
Este fin de semana, la Universidad de Massachusetts, Boston, ha alojando el ciclo de conferencias anual que organiza LibrePlanet.
El proyecto LibrePlanet es una red global de activistas del movimiento por el software libre, organizados en equipos que trabajan en conjunto para promover los ideales de la libertad del software mediante la contribución y la promoción del software libre.
El desarrollador principal del sistema operativo 100% libre Trisquel GNU/Linux, Rubén Rodríguez (quidam), se encontraba el Sábado allí como ponente.
Exurban Boston, Massachusetts, USA, Earth
http://aleatoric.org/
Views in my dents are solely mine & not those of any past|present employer|client.
pre-epoch parasite, post-epoch scavenger
karen sandler
brooklyn, ny
Buenos Aires
http://health.gnu.org
President of GNU Solidario Free Software, Social and Animal Rights activist Computer scientist. Medicine student
Toronto
http://adaptstudio.ca
Mouthpiece for Libre Graphics Magazine, Open Colour Standard.
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
http://evan.status.net/
Montreal hacker and entrepreneur. Founder of identi.ca, lead developer of StatusNet, CEO of StatusNet Inc.
Amherst, MA
http://thesilentnumber.me/
United States
http://www.jnadeau.org
I'm a father and husband along with being a blind GNU/Linux user. Who Also is an advocate of accessibility with Free software.
Boston, MA
http://www.eximiousproductions.com
I like noisy music, tasty food and free software.
Liberated Pixel Cup is a two-part competition: make a bunch of awesome free culture licensed artwork, and then make program a bunch of free software games that use it.
Liberated Pixel Cup brings together some powerful allies: Creative Commons, OpenGameArt, the Free Software Foundation, and you.
Internet anti hero/idiot. Ex-UK, now US. Opinions are mine, etc. Follow @fsf or @foocorp for others.
I'm interested in free software & free textbooks. I live in Cambridge, MA USA.
NYC, NY, USA, Earth
http://www.ebb.org/bkuhn
Executive Director & President, Software Freedom Conservancy. Director, FSF. Software Freedom advocate. GPL Enforcer. Occasional developer.
People often ask the Free Software Foundation (FSF) what license is recommended to use for their project. The FSF has written about this publicly before, but the information has been scattered around between different essays, FAQ entries, and license commentaries. This article collects all that information into a single source, to make it easier for people to follow and refer back to.
The recommendations are focused on licensing a work that you create—whether that's a modification of an existing work, or a new original work. These recommendations do not address the issue of combining existing material under different licenses. If you're looking for help with that, please check the FSF license FAQ.
JavaScript License Web Labels is a format that the FSF proposes webmasters use to publish license information and source code for the JavaScript they deploy on their sites. It looks simple enough to be accessible to any visitor, but provides enough detail that automated tools can confirm that all of a site's JavaScript is actually free. Such software will make it practical for people to run free JavaScript and refuse nonfree code. Tools like this are already being developed: LibreJS is a plug-in for Mozilla-based browsers that will support JavaScript License Web Labels.
OpenXC is combination of open source hardware and software that lets you extend your vehicle with custom applications and pluggable modules. It uses standard, well-known tools to open up a wealth of data from the vehicle to developers.
Starting tomorrow I will be in Boston for the annual conference of the Free Software Foundation, “LibrePlanet 2012“. We’ll be four people from Quebec (actually 5, just got last minute confirmation of another former colleague!), wanting to learn about what has been been brewing abroad and also wanting to share about our experiences here in Quebec.